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Query: UMLS:C0007095 (
carcinoid
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Malignant tumors of the small bowel are rare but carry a grave prognosis. Thirty-seven cases from the Tumor Registries of Brooke Army Medical Center. Fort Sam Houston, Texas, and Fitzsimons Army Medical Center, Denver, Colorado, were retrospectively studied. Twenty-nine males and eight females ranging from five to 86 years were included in the combined series. Thirteen
carcinoid
tumors, eight adenocarcinomas, seven lymphosarcomas, five leiomyosarcomas, two reticulum cell sarcomas, one liposarcoma, and one mesenchymal cell sarcoma were found. Symptoms included intermittent crampy abdominal pain,
intestinal obstruction
, intestinal bleeding with anemia, and weight loss. The diagnosis was made on the basis of the clinical picture in addition to physical findings and pertinent x-ray contrast studies. The overall survival rate was 25%. The treatment of choice is surgical extirpation of the tumor whenever possible followed by appropriate adjunctive modalities.
...
PMID:Malignant tumors of the intestine: a review of 37 cases. 57 64
We encountered an unusual case of
carcinoid
tumor of the terminal ileum with intermittent recurrent small
bowel obstruction
of seven years' duration rather than the usual presentation of chronic progressive obstruction.
...
PMID:Recurrent intermittent small bowel obstruction due to carcinoid tumor. 65 Aug 44
The treatment of thirty-one malignant and eleven benign neoplasms of the small intestine is reported. The most common symptom was abdominal pain followed by vomiting, diarrhea, weight loss, constipation, and gastrointestinal bleeding. In four cases small bowel perforated.
Intestinal obstruction
occurred in 31 per cent of patients. Preoperative diagnosis was made in 19 per cent of patients. All eleven patients with benign neoplasms were curatively treated by resection and primary anastomosis. Eighteen of the thirty-one patients with malignant tumors had curative resection, five had palliative resection, and eight had laparotomy and biopsy only. The most common benign tumor was leiomyoma. The most common malignant tumor was lymphoma (67 per cent) followed by adenocarcinoma (16 per cent),
carcinoid
(10 per cent), and leiomyosarcoma (3 per cent). Twenty-four patients were available for follow up; thirteen remain alive and eleven died, seven within one year and four within two years.
...
PMID:Primary neoplasms of the small bowel. 66 96
Carcinoid tumors
of the intestine may present with
bowel obstruction
or with the carcinoid syndrome. Confirmation of the diagnosis by biochemical means is easy. Management is often surgical and a number of different procedures have been advocated, e.g. resection of the primary, hemicolectomy and lately, partial hepatectomy. The angiographic features of two cases are presented and discussed; the usefulness of the information so gleaned in the choice of management is stressed.
...
PMID:The role of angiography in the management of intestinal carcinoid. 105
In patients with midgut
carcinoid
tumors a curative, radical tumor removal should be attempted when possible. As these tumors are generally malignant, irrespective of size, the radical surgery implies that intestinal resection for excision of a primary tumor should be combined with an extended mesenteric resection. When the patients present with the carcinoid syndrome the disease is, with few exceptions, too advanced for curative surgery. However, surgery often has to be performed also in patients with the advanced carcinoids. Patients with more extensive disease may thus benefit from surgical debulking of large mesenteric or hepatic metastases. Moreover, when the patients present with abdominal symptoms it is important to exclude a threatening major abdominal complication, such as
intestinal obstruction
or ischemia. As these complications may cause malnutrition and deterioration, it is important to treat them properly, sometimes by repeated surgery.
...
PMID:Abdominal surgery in patients with midgut carcinoid tumors. 185 12
An unusual case of a recurrent, postoperative, small-
bowel obstruction
is presented. The obstruction was due to a phytobezoar proximal to the site of a primary
carcinoid
of the small bowel. The radiologic findings of a mobile, intraluminal filling defect and a more distal, fixed mural mass are reviewed. The cause of the recurrent obstruction was likely a "ball-valve" effect of the phytobezoar at the site of stenosis caused by the
carcinoid
. This case emphasizes the value of small-bowel imaging in repeated small-
bowel obstruction
.
...
PMID:Small-bowel carcinoid presenting in association with a phytobezoar. 186 89
We reviewed 45 patients who underwent surgery for primary jejunoileal tumors over a 15-year period. There were 16 benign and 29 malignant tumors, which included 13 lymphomas, 7 adenocarcinomas, 7
carcinoid
tumors, and 2 leiomyosarcomas. Eighteen patients, 13 of whom had benign tumors, presented with intestinal bleeding and 5 tumors were found incidentally at laparotomy. Benign lesions were more frequently sited in the jejunum while malignant lesions were more common in the ileum (p less than 0.001). Lesions presenting with hemorrhage were more likely to be benign than malignant (p less than 0.001) and were more commonly sited in the jejunum than in the ileum (p less than 0.05). Visceral perforation (31%),
intestinal obstruction
(21%), and an abdominal mass (17%) were other presenting features in patients with malignant tumors. In spite of a wide variety of investigations, the correct diagnosis was reached preoperatively in only 31% of patients. Surgical management included either limited bowel resection or segmental resection with regional lymphadenectomy. Operative mortality was 13% and morbidity was 36%. Actuarial 5-year survival for all malignant tumors was 24%, being 64% at 5 years for
carcinoid
tumors, 20% at 30 months for adenocarcinomas, and 10% at 42 months for lymphomas. These results reemphasize the need for a high index of suspicion and early laparotomy in patients with obscure intestinal symptoms if the prognosis of small bowel tumors is to improve.
...
PMID:Primary jejunoileal tumors: a review of 45 cases. 199 11
Coincident with medical antitumor treatment of 138 patients suffering from mid-gut
carcinoid
tumors, 51 patients were subjected to surgery with the principal aims of removing primary tumors and debulking mesenteric or liver metastases. Sixteen patients had previously been operated with intestinal resection or, when the tumors had been considered inexcisable, with intestinal bypass or laparotomy alone. Apart from exhibiting symptoms related to the carcinoid syndrome, the majority (approximately 60%) of the 51 patients had generally intermittent, subileus-like abdominal pain and weight loss. In 18 patients, these symptoms were pronounced and associated with
intestinal obstruction
or severe malnutrition. Computed tomography and arteriography efficiently demonstrated mesenteric and liver metastases. At laparotomy, the primary intestinal tumors were small, mainly less than 1 cm in diameter, and they were multiple in 39% of the patients. Mesenteric metastases measuring up to 12 cm in diameter were present in 86% of the patients. These metastases were frequently associated with a pronounced mesenteric and retroperitoneal fibrosis causing fixation, angulation, and obstruction of the bowel as well as incipient intestinal gangrene in 8 patients. In all but 6 patients, the primary tumors could be removed by comparatively limited intestinal resections although bulky mesenteric metastases were often dissected from the mesenteric vessels. Liver metastases, found in 49% of the patients, were generally bilateral and multiple, and major hepatic metastases were resected in 6 patients. The results support a role for surgery also in the more compromised patients with mid-gut
carcinoid
tumors and that such intervention may be associated with considerable symptomatic relief and substantial periods of survival.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of mid-gut carcinoid tumors. 236 41
Carcinoid tumour
was the most common small bowel tumour found in this series of 179 patients. It occurred in 24% of patients. Forty-six percent of patients were asymptomatic during life, the tumours being found either at autopsy or during other surgical procedures. Of those that were symptomatic, half presented with
intestinal obstruction
and the rest with long-standing symptoms. An abdominal mass, which occurred in 14% of cases, is an uncommon physical finding since the majority present as small submucosal tumors. Fifty-eight per cent overall and 72% of those having surgery had evidence of regional spread, either by local invasion or in the form of regional nodal involvement. Seven per cent of patients have died of their disease. Excisional surgery should be performed for all cases where feasible, and repeated for recurrent symptoms.
...
PMID:Carcinoid of the small intestine. 242 20
Carcinoid
of the small intestine, usually found in the terminal ileum, presents a diagnostic challenge when the classic clinical and laboratory findings are absent. The commonest symptom, marked abdominal pain due to intussusception, may arouse suspicion of
carcinoid
. The precise preoperative diagnosis in the absence of the classic syndrome is impossible and the only way to diagnose it is by colonoscopic biopsy of the terminal ileum. The case described illustrates such a preoperative diagnosis in a 59-year-old woman with severe abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and weight loss. X-ray studies aroused suspicion of tumor intussusception as the cause of the
intestinal obstruction
. Colonoscopic biopsy revealed the presence of a
carcinoid
tumor. However, there had been no symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome, nor was there increased urinary 5-hydroxy indoleacetic acid. On operation the tumor was found to be disseminated and unresectable, so surgical intervention was limited to palliative ileo-transversostomy.
...
PMID:[Preoperative diagnosis of carcinoid of the terminal ileum in the absence of carcinoid syndrome]. 247 74
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